Religious club is just what the kids...
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Religious club is just what the kids need
As a parent living in the Laguna Beach Unified School District I
am thrilled that there is an after-school club that includes Bible
stories, games and music.
I am responding to the letter to the editor submitted by Lisa
Genesta (“PTA shouldn’t endorse religious club,” Coastline Pilot,
Sept. 17). Firstly, there are inaccuracies that need addressing and
secondly I would like to tell of my experience with the Good News
Club.
First, the Supreme Court case: Good News Club vs. Milford Central
School, June 11, 2001, declares that all clubs are allowed equal
access to school campuses if other clubs are also using school space.
In other words, if a Spanish club, chess club, etc, are allowed, a
club that has religious purposes is also allowed.
The education codes she cited are for religious instruction and do
not address after-school clubs. These clubs are voluntary activities,
after academic instruction is finished, and school officials are not
to provide instruction acting as school officials. All available
clubs taking place at El Morro are listed in the El Morro After
School Programs parent information flier with a description for each
club offered. They are voluntary participation activities and parents
must sign their children up, thus giving permission.
People may be interested to note that federal law exists making
all clubs available to students under an equal access provision. I
would suggest that all parents at El Morro, religious or not, are
taxpayers, PTA parents, volunteers and are eager to get involved and
take their own children to either the Good News Club or another club
available on school grounds.
The Good News Club sustains a parent-involved and interested
audience. The letter stated that there is “instruction” thus implying
students are held captive. This is false.
My three children and I attended the Good News Club for more than
a year. I was impressed to see so many parents attending as well, as
they were assisting, learning historical accounts from bible lessons,
bringing snacks for the kids and helping put the rooms back in order
after the club ended. As a newer resident of Laguna Beach, it was a
pleasure to get to know other parents in the area and be involved
with such a committed group of families.
It is puzzling to me to observe that many folks insisting on
promoting diversity, open-mindedness, multiculturalism, various
flavors of pluralism so frequently are opposed to the participation
of people with a Christian world view. Is this open-minded? Diverse?
Are people of faith disqualified from constitutional provisions of
freedom of speech?
While the overstated argument insists on “separation of church and
state,” this is a partial understanding of the Constitution. Our
founding fathers wanted religious activity not imposed by the state,
or free from government regulation, but never is it stated that
people of faith are not to influence public policy, or be involved in
the state. Indeed, it is imperative that everyone vote, voice ideas,
and challenge anyone who determines that a message, while it may be
distasteful, not trump up faulty reasoning in legal terms to silence
these messages. Again, the statement that the district made “this
egregious assault of our Constitution.” is also false.
LAURA WELLSFRY
Laguna Beach
How thrilled I was to read Lisa Genesta’s letter to learn of the
Good News Club. I am sure the district has looked into the legality
of this instruction. Having taught kindergarten in this district for
28 years, I was never aware that this opportunity for our elementary
children to learn the great truths of God was possible on a school
campus.
How refreshing to have young minds concentrate on pure, joyful and
kind truths instead of the trash that is so easily obtained on TV.
This is an optional after-school class for only those who choose to
learn what the Bible teaches. How wonderful.
P.S. Hymns in honors chorus? Fantastic! When I taught, we were not
even allowed to sing “Away in the Manger” at Christmas time.
KATY CRUMLEY
Laguna Beach
After school religious club is perfectly legal
This is in response to the letter written by Lisa Genesta.
As the mother of three school-aged children I felt concerned about
the information contained in Genesta’s letter. Two of my children
have in the past attended the Christian based Good News Club and I
was never aware that this club might be in violation of the First
Amendment. So I decided to do some research and this is what I came
up with: On June 11, 2001, the Supreme Court had determined that the
Good News Club can meet in public schools after school hours on the
same terms as other community groups( Good News Club vs. Milford
Central School). The court reaffirmed the fundamental idea that the
First Amendment does not require the government to discriminate
against religious individuals, groups or speech. Instead the court
has reiterated that religious speech is entitled to the same
protection as nonreligious speech.
Contrary to the information given by Genesta, the Good News Club
is an after-school club that does not use PTA funds. It is run by
volunteers, mostly parents. All materials that are used are funded by
the Child Evangelism Fellowship, therefore the Goods News Club is one
of the few clubs run after school that are free of cost. The
fellowship respects the parents’ rights to decide if their child
should attend fellowship events held on school property. Therefore
signed parental permission is required for attendance. No child whose
parents are against religious instruction would be able to attend.
Genesta’s rights to keep her son away from any religious instruction
are therefore protected.
I also reviewed the state education laws (Cal Ed Code 51511; 92150
and 260) that Genesta encouraged us to read. Since these after-school
clubs are extracurricular they do not fall under the California State
Education Code.
I hope that information will clear up any misconception concerning
the nature of the legality of the Good News Club on school grounds.
SONJA RADACH
Laguna Beach
PTA shouldn’t be part of religious club
First there were the three “R”s: readin’, ritin’ and rithmatic.
Now there appears to be four: readin’, ritin’, rithmatic and
religion.
Can readin’, ritin’, rithmatic, religion and rebellion be far
behind?
NIKO THERIS
Laguna Beach
Oh, and about that baseball fence
In my last letter to the editor about the Laguna Beach school
district’s disregard for common sense design I forgot to mention the
proposed and partially completed 30-foot high fence around the high
school baseball field.
The school district not only shows complete disregard for
aesthetic and practical design but has become an insensitive
neighbor. Many homeowners’ views will be adversely impacted by this
fence. There must be a better solution.
PETER WEISBROD
Laguna Beach
Baseball field; a community project
With all do respect to the athletes, their parents, boosters and
members of the community, we as neighbors are not opposed to the
baseball program or the field. We have lived in harmony with the
field for decades, the traffic, errant fly balls and any view
obstruction. We ask for no more and no less.
The school district has put itself in this position by not
including or notifying the impacted neighbors and community, so that
we could work together in the decision making process, thus avoiding
this situation. This is why we have Design Review and a City Council.
If we want to live as a community, we have to act like one.
“Community” by definition is: fellowship; a group linked by a
common policy; ... an interacting population; ... with a common
characteristic or interest living together within a larger society.
Wham!! Smack!! Pow!!! Holy High Fence, Batman! Where did that
come?
One afternoon there were dozens of 30-foot high 8-inch diameter
fence poles around the baseball field. We have been trying to work
with the Laguna Beach Unified School District, which is exempt from
all the local rules and regulations of the community with which you
and I must strictly adhere to. The district has turned down a number
of options from us. We are still trying to work together as a
community with a viable solution that we can all live with.
The simple actuarial analysis is that the field is too small. The
question is how can we, as a community, make this work without five
people telling the community that this what you get, now live with
it, like it or not. At least ask me first, before just going ahead;
wouldn’t you want the same? After all this is the community of Laguna
Beach. I would hope we could work together in harmony as a community
even though the cart got put before the horse.
DAVID AND MICHELE NELSON
Laguna Beach
A huge thanks to all who helped clean up
Rick Wilson, from the Surfrider Foundation, Roger von Butow from
Clean Water Now! Coalition, the Athens Group (Montage) and other
Laguna surfing organizers reported a strong Laguna turnout for the
California Coastal Cleanup day held on Sept. 18.
Strands from Main Beach to Aliso Creek in Laguna Beach were
addressed. It featured everyone from Girl Scout troops to European
tourists pitching in to do their part to keep our beaches in pristine
condition. The sub-station at Oak Street was thrilled to have a major
contingent of super enthusiastic Laguna Beach High School surf and
soccer team member and their mothers as well as a major pack of
locals and kind local citizens scouring the sand and bushes. As a way
to say thanks to volunteers, some goods such as bottled water from
the Beach House and Las Brisas, delicious oranges from South Laguna
Albertsons, and even Jason “Watto” Watson from Laguna Surf and Sport
were able to provide major goods to the participants -- in “Watto’s”
case, prior to him competing in the QuickSilver Surfshop challenge
down at Trestles later in the day.
Other stellar friends include Gina’s Pizza Oak Street , Thalia
Street Surfshop and Soul Surfing School, Christian Surfers, Orange
County and of course Wahoo’s Fish Tacos! Blessings to all.
Sept. 18 is actually the largest one-day global ocean
(https://www.ocparks.com) and watershed clean-up effort worldwide,
which includes more than 90 countries. Most cities and counties,
however, do coordinate a clean-up effort quarterly through groups
like the Surfrider Foundation. The clean-up yielded almost 1,000
pounds of trash in Laguna alone.
The Coastal Cleanup Day and Adopt-A-Beach quarterly programs have
been administered for the past four years by the Clean Water Now!
Coalition in Laguna Beach. Now that our little towns slowed down, our
beaches are clean and the surfs fun, lets soak it up for the next
nine months. Go to https://www.earth911.com to learn more about the
clean-up efforts.
CHRIS WILLIAMS
Laguna Beach
* The Coastline Pilot is eager to run your letters. If you would
like to submit a letter, write to us at P.O. Box 248, Laguna Beach,
CA 92652; fax us at (949) 494-8979; or send e-mail to
[email protected]. Please give your name and include your
hometown and phone number, for verification purposes only.
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